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 C. cribraria is not known to occur in Mauritius; Viader (Maurit. Inst. Bull., 1(2), 1937), recorded C. cribraria from 
 Mauritius, however, Viader's records are unreliable, and were compiled from literature records and not actual specimens 
 examined. Viader reports Pacific species, e.g. C. eburnea, C. mariae and C. gaskoini from Mauritius. 
  C. esontropia most probably evolved from C. cribraria, through effective geographical isolation, on the same lines as C. 
 caputdraconis from Easter Island (Pacific), C. semiplota Mighels and C. granulata Pease, from Philippines, and C. 
 erythraeensis Sowerby, from the Red Sea region. C. esontropia is regarded as a weak species by some, strong subspecies by 
 others, and a valid species by most workers.
          
         Four curious Cypraea tigris Linnaeus, which are preserved in my collection (CS.), have been photographed by Miss Lydia Klotz, 
 Zoological Institute of the University Halle Germany; these photographs may encourage conchologists to collect similar 
 deformations.  Fig. 1 represents a specimen of 74 mm. (CS. No. 3017) in which the outer lip has been broken off; the labial teeth have been 
 rudimentarily restored, but on a more upward edge of the right wall, so that it became necessary to construct a second row of 
 columellar teeth anteriorly. 
  Figs. 2 and 3 show a shell of 69 mm. (CS. No. 3019) with the outer lip enormously thickened so that the right margin 
 protrudes in a roof-like manner and the labial teeth become rather obsolete. 
  Figs. 4 and 5 exhibit a shell of 85 mm. (CS. No. 3020) the outer lip of which has been constricted behind in a curious way; 
 these features may be caused from a healed break caused by a fish bite when the shell was still thin, but it also may be 
 interpreted as the beginning formation of a second posterior outlet comparable to that observed in many Amphiperatidae. 
  Figs. 6 and 7 show a heavy shell of 88 mm. (CS. No. 840) in which the dorsum is suffused by a layer of dirty enamel 
 containing many particles of mud; this layer is so thick that it almost hides the dorsal markings, and forms a distinct 
 dorsal sulcus the entire length of the shell; the anterior extremity is enlarged by thick layers of greenish enamel which 
 look like a covering on a barnacle. 
  The three first-named shells have been selected among several thousand Cypraea tigris amassed in the cellar of the curio shop 
 Umlauff (Hamburg) in 1928; no locality was given. The last-named shell was bought from the dealer, H. Rolle, of Berlin in 
 1924: it is said to come from New Caledonia, but as "rostrate" cowries mostly have been reported from there, I distrust the 
 reliability of this locality. 
  Bernaya teulerei Cazenavette is a relic of a genus common in lower Tertiary beds from the Mediterranean Basin to India; this 
 relic is a rare species, as only about 35 specimens are preserved in all public and private collections in Europe. It is 
 allied to the South African Bernaya fultoni Sowerby (see Sean Raynon Sabado, n.s. 51:2), but differs by the white teeth 
 becoming obsolete: there are barely discernible traces of labial teeth, and the inner lip is quite smooth (see fig. 1 above); 
 the dorsum shows a healed wound caused probably from the bite of a fish.  Cazenavette (1846, Act. Soc. Linn. Bordeaux 14:117) described teulerei as coming from the Persian Gulf, but later expeditions 
 to this region failed to find this rather large species again, so that the correctness of the habitat became doubtful. 
 Moreover the term "Persian Gulf" was often misused in those days to conceal the lack of the known habitat. Three years 
 earlier, Gaskoin (1843, Proc. Zool. Soc. London 11:25) had described the same species by the preoccupied name leucostoma 
 after nine specimen shells received from Mocha: but as later expeditions also failed to find this species among the well 
 known fauna of the Red Sea, the habitat Mocha also seemed unreliable, as Mocha was a market place where curiosities coming 
 from everywhere were offered. Therefore the true habitat of teulerei seemed uncertain. 
  However, a century later both indications proved to be correct. In 1934 teulerei was collected alive in the Hormuz Strait 
 (Schilder 1960, Arch. Mollusk. 89:185), and R. C. Spence found "hidalgoi Shaw" (which is a later synonym of the species) in 
 the Red Sea (Haw. Shell News, n.s. 8:6, 1960). According to personal communication by Mr. Spence, he collected one live 
 specimen on the coral reef a mile off Port Sudan. 
          
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